February 20, 2022
2 mins read

Ties with China are going through a difficult phase: Jaishankar

Asked if the relationship with the West had improved as a result of the confrontation with China, he replied: “My relations with the West were quite decent before June 2020.”…reports Asian Lite News

In a prickly interaction with a moderator, S Jaishankar, Indian External Affairs Minister, remarked in a panel discussion at the annual Munich Security Conference that ties with China are going through a very difficult phase.

Answering a question on the Sino-India situation, the minister explained: “It’s a problem we are having with China; and the problem is this: that for 45 years there was peace, there was stable border management, there were no military casualties from 1975. That changed because we had agreements with China not to bring military forces to the border, we call it border but it’s a line of actual control, and the Chinese violated those agreements. Now the state of the border will determine the state of the relationship. That’s natural. So obviously relations with China are going through a very difficult phase.”

Asked if the relationship with the West had improved as a result of the confrontation with China, he replied: “My relations with the West were quite decent before June 2020.”

The questioner pointed out: “A recent poll, I think it was published just last week, indicates that on this occasion of the 30th anniversary of ASEAN-India relations which we celebrate this year, levels of trust between ASEAN countries and India are fairly low. India ranks fifth, after Japan, the United States, the EU and China; and only 16.6 per cent of respondents in this poll have said that they have confidence in India.”

Jaishankar answered: “I am a politician, so I believe in polls. But I have never seen a poll which has made any sense to me when it comes to foreign policy. So I guess what you cited is probably part of a long list. I would say our relations right now with ASEAN are actually growing well. The two big changes which are taking place are, we have much stronger security cooperation with the ASEAN and the other is physical connectivity.”

There was a charge of lack of principle between India’s attitude towards China and policy towards Russia, when it came to the latter’s current stand-off with Ukraine. The minister challenged this by saying: “I don’t think the situations in the Indo-Pacific and the trans-Atlantic are really analogous. We have quite distinct challenges between what’s happening here (Europe) and what happening in the Indo-Pacific.”

He added: “I think principles and interests are balanced and if people were so principled in this part of the world, they would have been practicing those principles in Asia or in Afghanistan.”

Jaishankar was speaking at a panel discussion on ‘A Sea Change? Regional Order and Security in the Indo-Pacific’. Other speakers in the conversation were representatives of the three other QUAD member countries, namely Yoshimasa Hayashi, foreign minister in Japan, Marise Payne, the Australian foreign minister, and Jeanne Shaheen, a US senator.

Thirty heads of government or state and over 100 minister rank officials are attending the weekend conference.

ALSO READ-Karnataka students with hijab turned away

Previous Story

58 students suspended for defying hijab order

Next Story

Punjab goes to polls

Latest from -Top News

54 killed in overnight airstrikes in Gaza

It was the second night of heavy bombing, after airstrikes Wednesday on northern and southern Gaza killed at least 70 people, including almost two dozen children Multiple airstrikes have hit Gaza’s southern

No Military Fix for Ukraine War, Says Rubio

Rubio stated that the US hopes that progress will soon be made in the negotiation process…reports Asian Lite News U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated on Thursday that the Russia-Ukraine conflict

BNP seeks non-interference with India

Calls for non-interference, long-term cooperation, and bilateral trust-building as region faces new challenges A senior leader of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) has emphasised the need for India and Bangladesh to build

Taiwan tests new missile system

Visuals released by the MND showed the Land Sword II in action, with footage capturing the successful launch of the missile system in a test-firing exercise. Taiwan has conducted back-to-back military drills
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Next chapter of the Great Game unfolds in Afghanistan

Some analysts, suspecting US hand are of the view that

China, Japan spar over former’s actions in Indo-Pacific

The Bluebook reportedly criticises China’s actions in the South China